I never really got bitcoin until I read your book. After that, I become interested in the technology and bought a good 5 figures (USD) of bitcoins. I think most of the negativity that comes with it, is due to ignorance.
1. Do you really think that Bitcoin has over 1million active users? It seems to me if this is the case, then we should be already doing +1million transactions per day.
2. If we agree that educating people about bitcoin will help it grow, what is the next step? Should we have a non-technical people book about bitcoin? How can we get it to be read by +100 million person?
3. I learnt software development on my own, and it makes me money. If I want to get into the bitcoin world, how can I monetize my new skills?
Hi Andreas......love your passion for and dedication to Bitcoin. I know it's helped me truly understand what Bitcoin is and what it can be and couldn't agree with you more regarding remaining steadfast in bringing awareness to Bitcoins true value and principles, so having said that......
What is the best thing I can do to help Bitcoin prosper and on a more functional point of view, being that volatility is one of the biggest current drawbacks in Bitcoin, what would you suggest to hedge against this for the everyday user. Thank you!!
Mike Cautillo
Hey Andreas!
One time you mentioned that you started with youtube videos, and you gained a following from there, is that correct?
Are any of your early-day youtube posts still available? Would you share the link of some of your first bitcoin videos?
Thanks!
I expected bitcoin to start getting big in countries that combine a need for such technology with a basic level of cellular infrastructure, english-speaking population (because most of the docs and apps are english) and literacy. The prime example of that is the Philippines and I think we're now seeing a surge in interest and use there, as well as several startups offering liquidity and remittances.Hello Andreas. It seems to me that the current state of affairs is that the places in the world that had seen the most bitcoin awareness (North America and Europe) are the ones who probably need it less. I know you've traveled a lot, so have you seen anything that caught your attention? Is the currency being used in some part of the world more than you expected?
Do you think spending bitcoins on goods/services is important (as opposed to buy & hold / speculation) and what can we do to increase that spending in the community?
Is it important for brick/mortar merchants to accept bitcoin, or should we leave them be and focus on online only?
Bitcoin's price is a chaotic system that reflects thousands of inputs in a way that no one can predict. Providing root-cause analysis of price movements is a fool's game. It is neither verifiable, nor predictive and therefore it is not science but mysticism.Hi Andreas,
Thank you for doing this AMA!
Can you speak to the recent price spike and speculate or offer any expertise on why you think the rise happened, and why it came back down, so quickly? Some media obviously pointed to ponzi's (the MMM scheme), some said it was due to China capital control evasions, some say just due to overall interest gaining momentum, but, nobody really knows. I'm just curious on what your take is?
Thanks in advance!
Yes, the third world will be changed by bitcoin, as will the rest of the world. It may take decades, but decentralized currencies happened already and there's no going back. The world economy changed on January 3rd 2009, even though most people failed to notice at first.Hi Andreas,
Thanks for sparing the time to answer questions, and for everything you've done!
I wonder if I could ask what you think bitcoin's prospects are for third world countries? Do you support Marc's idea that bitcoin can change the third world, or is that too idealistic?
No. There's a delicate balance between the number of times the blockchain forks each day and the propagation frequency of blocks. Faster blocks will mean more forks. Also, such a change would be a lot more complex than simply increasing the block size. Many other parameters in bitcoin (difficulty retargetting, reward halving, total supply) depend on a 10-minute block and would need to be revised to account for any change in timing.Can Bitcoin TPS be increased by reducing the time taken to create blocks eg to 1minute instead of 10 mins, instead of trying to increase the block size?
Hey Andreas,
I really respect and honor the great things you have done to get the word out about bitcoin and the blockchain and I have personally learned a lot from you over the last few years...
My question is this, Bitcoin no doubt is the grand daddy of blockchain based digital currency and currently seems to have the most secure network provided by miners all over the world running full nodes and recently has increased in value spiking as high as $500... There is no doubt in my mind that Bitcoin has what it takes to achieve the goals originally intended but it seems like the centralized banks and corporations want to steal the blockchain technology for themselves leaving Bitcoin out of the equation... Is this possible? Can they succeed in what they are trying to accomplish with permission based or industry specific blockchains and eventually try to outlaw Bitcoin? And is it a good idea for the digital currency community to start to diversify and support other various types of digital currencies therefore creating variety, healthy competition, would it take some pressure off of Bitcoin as the target of choice by the centralized bankers and corporatocracy?
There are probably many bugs and security flaws in bitcoin. Being developed as an open-source, in-the-wild system on the Internet, we will keep finding and fixing these bugs. I don't expect any will be as serious as to cause more than temporary minor disruption.Hi Andreas,
Thanks for being such a fearless champion, unmatched professional and positive force in the industry!
My first question is what do you see as bitcoin/cryptocurrency's biggest hurdles to greater consumer & merchant adoption; (irrespective of the banking regime's efforts to discredit a non-politicized currency concept)? Will it remain an alternative, more relatable to the world's population of under banked communities? or do you see evidence that it will achieve a more ubiquitous use case as a unified, border less global currency that most people will prefer?
In addition, I'm curious if you see any potential technical/security flaws with the current or emerging state of the protocol and/or ecosystem?
Best,
John Karantonis
Hi Andreas,
I enjoyed both of your Joe Rogan podcasts and thought to let you know I made a new Cryptocurrency art innovation.
The site went online yesterday.
https://www.artforcrypto.com/
Would love to get your feedback on it.
Best,
Vesa
Ps. The work I attached is about the combination of both the coming Bitcoin fork as well as the flippening.
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